relegating

[ US /ˈɹɛɫəˌɡeɪtɪŋ/ ]
[ UK /ɹˈɛlɪɡˌe‍ɪtɪŋ/ ]
NOUN
  1. authorizing subordinates to make certain decisions
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How To Use relegating In A Sentence

  • He defended a sacred "complementarity" of the sexes, essentially relegating women to the service of others and to her own biology, from which she is cautioned not to seek "liberation. Angela Bonavoglia: Benedict in America: The Man Show
  • She mounts a scholarly exposition of the widely held doctrines of Trinity, original sin, and divinity of Christ, relegating them to later accretions in history.
  • she had dismissed him quite brutally, relegating him to the status of a passing fancy, or less
  • Employer discrimination and ageism are a contributing factor in relegating these workers to the scrap heap.
  • The former Liverpool striker is reportedly on his way out of Real Madrid after the Spanish giants signed both Julio Baptista and Robinho - relegating Owen to fifth choice striker at the club.
  • They nevertheless abandoned them about 20-25 years ago for rectangular mud-brick, thatch-roofed cottages, relegating the beehive houses to storage purposes.
  • She wants to move another lodger in effectively relegating me to one final room in the house, my bedroom.
  • Providing parenthetical information or explanatory footnotes on those not discussed in the introductions might have been more helpful than relegating the information to the index.
  • At some point, the researchers do not know exactly when, an unknown factor allowed lizards and snakes to rise to dominance in South America, relegating the sphenodontids to the relic tuataras in isolated New Zealand.
  • However, in that year, senior air force officials proclaimed April 9 as Royal Thai Air Force Day, relegating March 27 to Commemoration Day.
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